Volume 133, 2006

Are gas-phase models of interstellar chemistry tenable? The case of methanol

Abstract

We consider the case of methanol production in cold dark clouds, also known as quiescent cores, for which recent work shows that a purely gas-phase synthesis is unlikely to produce a sufficient amount to explain the observational fractional abundance of ≈10−9. Moreover, recent experiments appear to confirm a previous hypothesis that methanol can be formed on cold grain surfaces by the hydrogenation of CO via successive reactions with hydrogen atoms. In this paper we consider two ways of including the surface formation of methanol into chemical models of cold dark clouds. First, we use a gas-phase model and artificially include the surface formation of methanol in the same manner that the formation of molecular hydrogen is included. Secondly, we utilize a gas–grain code with a new mechanism for desorption following exothermic chemical reactions on grain surfaces. The latter method can reproduce the observed fractional abundance of gas-phase methanol and many other gas-phase species in the well-studied cold dark cloud TMC1-CP but the best fit to the observational data occurs at times significantly later than at ages estimated from gas-phase models.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Nov 2005
Accepted
30 Jan 2006
First published
12 May 2006

Faraday Discuss., 2006,133, 51-62

Are gas-phase models of interstellar chemistry tenable? The case of methanol

R. Garrod, I. Hee Park, P. Caselli and E. Herbst, Faraday Discuss., 2006, 133, 51 DOI: 10.1039/B516202E

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